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A History of Confusing Stuff in the Sky [Garrett M. Graff, The Atlantic]

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• Balloons have been used for spying and bombing since World War I, and German zeppelins regularly crossed the English Channel to drop hand grenades or small bombs on London.
• During World War II, Japan lofted about 9,000 balloon bombs toward the West Coast in 1944 and 1945, hoping to spread fear, ignite forest fires, and bring the war to America’s homeland.
• At the end of World War II, the arrival of the nuclear bomb meant that an entire city could be vaporized by a lone attacker arriving out of the blue sky.
• In 1947, reports of a mysterious flight of objects over the Cascades in the Pacific Northwest touched off a summer of excited, panicked UFO sightings.
• In 1952, the Air Force’s UFO-investigation program, Project Blue Book, figured out that Captain Thomas F. Mantell had most likely been chasing a Navy weather balloon when he crashed his plane.
• In the postwar era, balloons represented cutting-edge military technology, and the U.S. had multiple secret balloon projects under way.
• On Saturday, the U.S. military deployed an F-22 to shoot down a Chinese spy balloon, and the pilot who flew the plane is known as FRANK01, honoring Frank Luke, the balloon-busting ace of 1918.

Published February 8, 2023
Visit The Atlantic to read Garrett M. Graff’s original post A History of Confusing Stuff in the Sky

The History Behind the Chinese Spy Balloon [Garrett M. Graff, The Atlantic]

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• Balloons have been used for spying and bombing since World War I, and German zeppelins regularly crossed the English Channel to drop hand grenades or small bombs on London.
• During World War II, Japan lofted about 9,000 balloon bombs toward the West Coast in 1944 and 1945, hoping to spread fear, ignite forest fires, and bring the war to America’s homeland.
• At the end of World War II, the arrival of the nuclear bomb meant that an entire city could be vaporized by a lone attacker arriving out of the blue sky.
• In 1947, reports of a mysterious flight of objects over the Cascades in the Pacific Northwest touched off a summer of excited, panicked UFO sightings.
• In 1952, the Air Force’s UFO-investigation program, Project Blue Book, figured out that Captain Thomas F. Mantell, a World War II pilot, had most likely been chasing a Navy weather balloon when he crashed.
• In the postwar era, balloons represented cutting-edge military technology, and the U.S. had multiple secret balloon projects under way.
• Today, sophisticated surveillance systems have failed to spot the forays of other Chinese balloons, and the U.S. military deployed an F-22 to shoot down the modern version of the first aerial weapon the country ever faced.

Published February 8, 2023
Visit The Atlantic to read Garrett M. Graff’s original post The History Behind the Chinese Spy Balloon

The Chinese Spy Balloon Over My House [Walter Kirn, The Free Press]

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• Montanans spotted a Chinese spy balloon hovering above the state’s missile silos and bases, prompting a minor national panic.
• The federal government was already aware of the balloon, but had kept it on the “down-low” in order to not disrupt a meeting between Secretary of State Antony Blinken and high Chinese officials.
• The incident sparked stereotypes about Montanans being quick to anger and hostile to outsiders.
• A few weeks prior, a New York Times article had portrayed Montana as a quasi-fascist state, which the author of the article claims is exaggerated.
• The author reflects on the state’s lack of power and influence, and how Montanans are often portrayed in a negative light by the media.
• Despite this, the author is proud of Montanans for spotting the balloon and raising an alarm.

Published February 5, 2023
Visit The Free Press to read Walter Kirn’s original post The Chinese Spy Balloon Over My House

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